Well, good morning, church. Please
turn with me and your Bibles this morning to 1 Thessalonians
chapter 4. 1 Thessalonians chapter 4, we'll
be reading verses 9 through 18 this morning, continuing in our
series, Christ Our Hope. Our passage this morning, let
me just tell you, it's such a beautiful passage. It's such a hope-filled
passage, so encouraging to us. It's used at so many funerals
to bring assurance, to bring comfort to those who are in grief. And so what I'm gonna do this
morning is I'm just gonna let God's Word speak for itself.
And we're just gonna read it. And I encourage you as we do
that, that you would open your Bibles that you brought to church
this morning. And if you haven't, open the one that's in the pew
in front of you. Right? And you would read it for yourself.
And just let God, in His Word, assure us of what is true. All
right? And so 1 Thessalonians chapter
4, starting in verse 9. It says, Now concerning brotherly
love, You have no need for anyone to write to you, for you yourselves
have been taught by God to love one another, for that is indeed
what you are doing to all the brothers throughout Macedonia.
We encourage you brothers to do this more and more, and to
aspire to live quietly, and to mind your own affairs, and to
work with your hands as we instructed you, so that you may walk properly
before outsiders and be dependent on no one. But we do not want
you to be uninformed about those who are asleep, that you may
not grieve as others who have no hope. For since we believe
that Jesus died and rose again, even so, through Jesus, God will
bring with him those who have fallen asleep. For this we declare
to you by a word from the Lord, that we who are alive, who are
left until the coming of the Lord, will not precede those
who have fallen asleep. For the Lord himself will descend
from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel,
and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ
will rise first. And then we who are alive, who
are left, will be caught up together with him in the clouds to meet
the Lord in the air. And so we will always be with
the Lord. Therefore, encourage one another
with these words. Church, will you pray with me? Father, as we approach this passage
this morning, let our hope be set on its contents. God, that
we truly understand and believe, God, that Christ is coming again. Let that be our hope. Fill your
church with that hope. Fill us with this assurance of
better days ahead and all that that means. God, and I pray that
as we impact this a little bit this morning. that Your Holy
Spirit would go before us and stir up this truth in us. God, this I pray in Jesus' name,
amen. All right, so the goal of the
message this morning is very simple. All right, I'm gonna
make it plain to you. It's to take the truth of the
return of Christ and to encourage you with it, all right? And so
that's what verse 18 says. Therefore, encourage one another
with these words. And so you don't have to wonder,
hey, where are we going this morning? What's Chris gonna do, right?
My goal is that you would be encouraged, right? That I would
encourage you so that when you leave this place and walk out
those doors and go into the real world, you would be able to encourage
one another and others. All right? Be encouraged this
morning? All right, so turn to your neighbor
and say, this is gonna be encouraging. All right, you guys actually
sounded like you meant it. First service, there's like,
I don't know, right? But you guys, right? This is
gonna be encouraging. I'm encouraged by your encouragement,
right? All right, so this is gonna be
encouraging. That's the goal that we're going for. The title
of the message is Hope in the Coming of the Lord. Jesus Christ
is coming again. Amen. All right, make a note
of that. Write it in your Bible. write
it on your forehead, write it in the mirror, write it on your
bedpost, right? Let it be encouraging to you.
Jesus Christ is coming again. And listen, Jesus Christ coming
again is the greatest hope of every Christian. If you could
get a healthy Christian, a mature Christian, a strong Christian,
and you could autopsy their soul, and you could diagnose that more
than their thoughts about this year, or more than their thoughts
about the next decade, or even their thoughts about their earthly
future, their greatest hope would be that Jesus Christ is coming
again. That's my hope. I love this verse
in Hebrews chapter 9. God's word is so clear, right?
Just in case you have doubts, right? You might doubt this.
Listen to Hebrews chapter 9 verse 28. So Christ, having been offered
once for the sins of many, right? He came the first time. Look
at what it says. will appear a second time, just
in case you're doubting. That's what God's Word says.
All right, a second time not to deal with the sin thing that's
been taken care of, but to save those who are eagerly waiting
for Him. Amen. Right? This is the great
hope of the church. This is the great hope of every
Christ follower. And so we have to go back to
where we started at the beginning, week one, when I went to David
in Psalm 42. Why are you cast down, O my soul? Hope in God, this is as sure
as it gets, all right? So Christians who are sullen
or who are filled with fear as they think about their future,
They haven't grasped the reality of this understanding as the
core of our faith. Right? And we need to understand
it, church. That's the first thing. Understand this. All right? Listen, Team Hope.
Jesus Christ is coming again. And it's the greatest hope that
we have. All right? Give me another amen.
Amen. All right? Now, here's the truth.
I could get shot while preaching this passage. I could get hit
by a bus after I walk out of the church today. I could get
cancer and the rest of my life would be a long, hard road of
suffering until death. I could grow old and live a relatively
healthy life and die peacefully in my sleep. Now, I don't particularly
want all of those, but that is not where my hope is set. The Christian knows this world
is not my home. And no matter what my life here
on earth is like, one day Jesus Christ is coming again. And when
He does, I will be raised to new life, full life, complete
life with Him forever. That's my hope. And as we read
about God's rapture of His church, not some secret rapture that's
not actually in Scripture, this one. We read about it today. As we read about the rapture
of the church, as we read about Christ returning and reclaiming
all Christians from earth, we must understand, okay? We must
understand. Look up here for a second. Why
do we need to understand this? We need to understand this because
hope isn't magic. I'm not gonna do a little parlor
trick up here, all right? Hope is not a motivational speech. All right, hope isn't, God help
us this morning, hope is not a preacher pep talk that doesn't
affect your soul beyond Sunday afternoon. All right, hope is
not that. True hope is anchoring to something
real. It's a real promise anchored
to the rock of God's word. It's confident assurance that
there is something better ahead and that better thing that the
King of Kings and the Lord of Lords is holding for me in regard
to my future. All right, and we can take that
hope to the bank. All of what has been written
by the Holy Spirit in the Word of God is the creator of the
universe's declaration about what is certain for every follower
of Christ. It is our future. All right? And so do we understand it? And so let's get after that this
morning, and let's be encouraged by God's Word, starting in verse
nine. All right, go ahead and look
at verse nine. He says, now concerning, stop, we gotta stop right there
for a second. All right, so anytime we see this phrase, Paul is shifting
the subject a little bit. All right, so we're talking about
in context, walking in a manner pleasing to the Lord, right?
And so Paul just covered the area of sexual purity and holiness,
and now we're shifting our focus to love and love of others, okay? And so he says, now concerning
Philadelphia, Brotherly love. We're all familiar with Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, the city of brotherly love. That's where it comes from.
It comes right here from this word in the Bible, Philadelphia.
Paul says, no one needs to write to you about that. Well, why
not, Paul? Isn't brotherly love a good thing?
Isn't it like an important thing? Yeah. He says, I don't need to
write to you about this because you're already doing it. The
question is, why are they doing it? And I love this, look at
this. He says, you're doing it because you have been taught
by God to love. All right, I love that. That
word, Theododectoi, taught by God. All right, we've all been
taught by those around us. All right, some things stick,
some things don't. But when God teaches us something,
it hits a little differently, doesn't it? It's a profound truth that sinks
a little deeper, doesn't it? It's a new conviction in us or
a new understanding that cannot be shaken because we have been
theododactoy, taught by the Creator Himself. But look at what they
had been taught because we completely miss this in English. It says
to love. But that word love is a different
word than Philadelphia. It's the word agape. In other
words, he's saying you don't need to be instructed on how
to do the brotherly love thing when you have been taught by
God himself to do the agape thing. God-like love, a better, fuller
kind of love. See, brotherly love is love for
one's fellow man, as a brother, as part of a family, right? You're
part of a group. You ever have a friend who's
like an idiot and yet you like stand behind them because they're
part of the group? Right? That's brotherly love.
Christians should have this family or fraternity mindset when it
comes to one another because we have been filled by the Spirit
of God. We are part of God's family.
Right? We have that in common. And so
we should be loving one another warts and all. But listen, that's
hard enough to do with those who are part of the family. Much
more hard is it to have this brotherly love toward those who
are not part of the family. And Paul is saying that the Thessalonian
church knew how to do the Philadelphia thing because they had been taught
by God what his kind of love was. A love that was pure, and
unconditional, faithful, sacrificial, and always filled with hope.
And he exhorts them, guys, keep going after that more and more.
Keep going after that. But then he adds these three
things to it. He says, in doing so, remember
to hold your peace, attend to your affairs, and continue to
work hard. Well, why is he saying that?
Well, remember the context of what was going on when 1 Thessalonians
was written. The Thessalonian church is experiencing
persecution and hardship at the hands of people who do not like
them. And how the people of God in the midst of that respond
to it will tell those around them, those looking at them,
a lot about who they are and about who their God is. Those
outside the church, they were looking at the church and saying,
okay, what's the deal here? Right? Who are these people?
What's all this uproar about? And you know what? I think the
world is still looking at the church, asking those questions
today. And in that Paul is saying, okay,
here's how we operate. Hold your peace, work hard, and
continue to love. Show people who you are, whose
you are, by your example. In other words, verse 12, walk
properly before outsiders. Listen, that is hard enough to
do when people like you, but it is God-like to do even when
they don't. And so the question becomes,
OK, if that's the call, why on earth would I do that? Why would
I care about those around me? Why would I love the unlovable? Why would I love the undeserving? Why would I sacrifice anything
of mine for the indifferent, for the hostile? I mean, YOLO,
right? You only live once. Why would
I waste my life? in the concern of others. And
listen, church, this is what we need to understand. Because
the answer is, this world is not my home. My home is with
Jesus, and my hope is set on Him. Not on my ability to get
a million dollars, not on my vacation at the lake, not on
the amount of Instagram followers that I have. No, no, God looks
at that and He says, you think that's the best life? You think
that's the thing worth chasing after? You think that's gonna
bring satisfaction to your heart? Those things are nothing compared
to Jesus Christ, and He is coming again. He is the greater thing. That was a great spot for an
amen, by the way, right? And here's the truth. Christians
need to renew our minds about this. We need to understand that
so we don't get distracted and despondent. Christ is my life. You can have this world. Give
me Jesus. I told you this message is going
to be encouraging. And so we need to know what's in store
for those who have put their faith in Christ. And Paul says
this. He says, I do not want you to
be uninformed. So that word that he uses, uninformed,
that's the word from which we get our word agnostic. I don't
know. Maybe he's coming back. Maybe
he's not. I don't know. Paul says, I want this to be
clear. He's not saying that you know
it and don't believe it. He's saying that many, even Christians,
they don't actually understand that Jesus Christ is coming again.
Now, the skeptics will say, well, Christians have been saying that
Jesus Christ is gonna come back for 2,000 years. Where is he? Okay. Well, they were saying
that the Messiah was coming for 4,000 years, and then he came. Didn't he? I don't know. I don't know if
we believe that he came. Did he come? He did, right? Amen. Jesus Christ will come,
is coming again. Now, I don't want you to be uninformed,
brothers and sisters, about those who have fallen asleep. So they're
asking the question, well, what happens to us in death? So frequently
in the scriptures, Sleep is euphemistic for death. The idea is that just
as sleep is not permanent, for the Christian, death is not permanent. It is one of our greatest traditions. Therefore, we do not mourn in
death as those who have no hope. In fact, we bury the body in
hope of resurrection. Right? Right? Okay? And so he says, I don't want
you to be uninformed, brothers, about those who have fallen asleep,
that you might not grieve as those who have no hope. Right?
There's our word, hope. Grieving is not wrong. Right? Grieving is good. We're created
emotional beings. God is an emotional God. Grief
is good. How many people here have lost
loved ones who have gone into eternity? Right? All of us have.
On some level. Right? In some way, all of us
are connected to this. And you know what? It's okay to grieve
that. But we don't grieve like others who have no hope. I had
an uncle who passed away several years ago now. And in that passing,
I was given the somber privilege to be one of the first to visit
with my aunt while she was still very fresh in her grief. And
they were not believers. And that visit marked me. because
I got to experience firsthand the raw grief of one who had
no hope. And in death, the hope of resurrection, those
without Christ only see a hopeless end. But we, as followers of
Christ, we see beyond death to an endless hope. Do you see the
difference there? Right? That should be encouraging
to us. Paul isn't saying don't grieve. When people leave us,
we face the prospect of living the rest of our earthly life
without them. We're sad, we grieve. The biblical
word for that is lupeo, soul pain. And that's okay. but be encouraged church because
Jesus Christ is coming again. And one day the skies are going
to break open and he is going to return and every question
will be answered and every wrong will be righted and we will be
united with the Lord in the fullness of life, his life forever. All right, as surely as God declares
it in his scriptures, it will come to pass. So put your hope
right there, right there. But maybe you're with me in this,
because I'll be the first to admit, sometimes I get a little
distracted. I mean, don't we? Sometimes we
get a little distracted. I'm not above that. Often I think,
or we're caught thinking things like, man, I hope he doesn't
come at the wrong time. Like I'm doing four weddings
this year. Man, I hope he doesn't come before my wedding day. I hope he doesn't come before I
go on vacation. I hope he doesn't come before
I have all of my stuff together the way that I want it. Listen
church, we need to be careful not to trade our hope for the
lesser thing. Instead, we need to take all
of our eggs and put it into the biblical hope basket, knowing
I'm not in charge. His timing is perfect. I'm not
in control. I don't dictate what's happening. He's in control. You
hear me? He's in control. Jesus Christ is Lord. That means
master. He's my savior. That's all that
I need. That's all that I need. You can
have this world. You can have it. That's fun to
say. Say it with me. You can have
it. No, no, say it with some attitude, like you actually mean
it. You can have it. You can have this world. Give
me Jesus. That's what I want. Because I
know that, that's where I'll be full. And in that truth, guys, we need
to lead our families. And in that truth, we need to
love the world around us. Because the truth is that we
certainly, in this truth, pray for and we work for the people
around us. We want them to be saved. We
want them to have this hope. We want them to know that the
return of Christ, that is actually where hope is found. But church, don't put your hope
at risk for anything. I was a campus minister at the
University of Rochester And one day I was called into the director
of the Interfaith Chapel's office because she was offended that
I shared the gospel with her. And so we were having a conversation,
and in my conversation with her, I just asked her, I said, why
won't you put your faith in Jesus? She had communicated to me that
she liked Jesus. Reading the gospels, man, stuff they said,
oh, super profound or whatever. Okay, straight up, why won't
you do it? Why won't you put your faith
in Jesus? You wanna know what she told me? Should I just stand up here looking
awkwardly until you say yes? This is what she told me. She
told me that she couldn't do it because she knew that if she
believed Christianity, it would mean that her husband who had
died because of a drug overdose, and he was not a Christian, not
a follower of Jesus. It would mean that he wouldn't
be with her in eternity. Now, aside from that being poetic, what? She was willing to trade her
eternal hope for the lesser thing. Actually, she was willing to
trade it for a straight up lie, thinking that we can actually
affect what happens in eternity at all. What can we possibly gain from
that? Listen, Jesus Christ is coming again. That is truth.
This is the greatest hope of every person, every Christian.
We need to understand that. Yes, we grieve, but not like
people who have no hope. You say, okay, so how do I maintain
this hope? Look at verse 14. He says, for
since we believe, stop. There it is. We believe. Understand it, believe it. It is not yours until your faith
is exercised toward it. Now here's the thing about faith.
I can't really say much about it. I can't really say much about
you just by looking at you and what's on the outside. Right?
It's what's on the inside that counts. Because that's where
faith resides. And I can preach on hope until
I'm hoarse, and I'm trying to this morning. But if it's not
there in your heart, if faith is not in your heart, and you
embracing it as your anchoring reality, the truth is you will
not live like the Father wants us to live, with confident assurance
of better things ahead, a confident expectation of better things
ahead, because of Christ. He says, since we believe that
Jesus died and rose again, even so, through Jesus, God will bring
with him those who have fallen asleep. Okay, so here we go.
Back in the day, God looked at the world and said, they need
hope. They need salvation. They are
hopeless without me. And so what did he do? He sent
his son, okay? Sent his son to the world, not
to condemn the world, but to save the world. Right? Give them hope. That's what he
did. And so Jesus Christ conquered
sin and death to offer salvation freely to all those who believe. Here's my question to you. Do you think that God will then
abandon those that he has saved in the end? Surely not. Are you kidding me? Right? He says, for this we declare
to you by a word from the Lord. I love God's word because it's
unapologetic in its teaching. And Paul, here he is telling
the church, this is not my Paul opinion. I'm not trying to motivate
you with pastor speech. He says, thus says the Lord. I'm coming again to get you. Put your hope there. Love that. All right? Straight from the
mouth of God. Therefore, guys, this must be
fairly important. For this, we declare to you by
a word from the Lord that we who are alive, who are left until
the coming of the Lord. I hope that's us. Right? I hope
that's us. How many people here would take
a total pass on the death thing? Right? I'm not going to get up
to heaven and go, man, you know what? I wish I died. I wish I
had the chance to experience that. No, nobody's gonna do that.
Who's with me in that? Right? No, no, no. God, I hope
this is us. Lord, this would be super awesome
if we could be part of that group. But either way, God's grace is
sufficient, right? Right? All right, we who are alive,
who are left until the coming of the Lord, will not precede
those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord himself will descend
from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel,
with the sound of the trumpet of God. That's how it's gonna
happen. All right, know that, understand that. And the dead
in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive, who are
left, will be caught up together with him in the clouds to meet
the Lord in the air. All right, now we need to pay
attention to this, okay? All right, pay attention. Check
your brain in for 10 seconds, okay? Because we don't want to
blow this. I don't want someone from Pittsburgh
Community Church flying up there ahead of all the dead people
and Jesus has to be like, Dana, get back in line, get back in
line. How awesome will this day be?
Right? Guys, this is our hope. The Lord
will descend, the dead in Christ will rise, and then those who
are alive will go to join the party to meet with the Lord in
the air. And look what it says. It says,
so we will always be with the Lord. Guys, the greatest longing
for every heart is the longing for the lover of our soul, for
our Creator. And when Christ returns, we will
be with Him forever. And in that day, in that, I'll
close with this, right? So the question becomes then,
okay, all right, how do I hold on to this? How do I get confidence? Yes, I read it. How do I get
confidence in this? Well, confidence is only born
of experience. And so I would not expect that
somebody new to following Christ or a baby Christian would have
the same kind of faith that maybe a person who has been walking
with the Lord for decades might have. But you know, I have some
people in my life that I know that if they say something, and
they say they'll do something, and say they'll be somewhere,
they will do it. They will be there. And why do I have confidence
in that? Because time and again, they've shown themselves, proven
themselves to be reliable to their word, faithful. The same
is true of God. I once read this book about God's
promises called Always True. Always True. God has made all
sorts of promises to us in Scripture, hasn't he? It's not like one,
it's like a lot. When you're a baby Christian,
you hear a promise, you read a promise, and you think to yourself,
you're like, well, I mean, that's what it says. Wouldn't that be
awesome if it were true? But after you've walked a while
with the Lord, putting the full weight of faith down on his promises. And time and again, your experience
is that he proves himself to be true. I'll tell you what,
I've never been disappointed. He's always been faithful. He's
always shown up and done that which he's promised. Now, full
disclosure, sometimes I wish he'd tell me what he was doing.
Wouldn't that be nice? And sometimes I wish he would
do it sooner. And sometimes I wish he'd do it differently. But always
afterwards, I find out that his ways and his timing, perfect,
faithful. And as we close, I wanna just
give you a little secret verse, little secret verse. Not one
that I've scribbled in the margin that I made up. It's actually
in the Bible. But I'm not sure we know this one. Jeremiah 1.12. Do you know it? Do you know it?
Jeremiah 1.12. It's a secret verse, I'm telling
you. Jeremiah 1.12, the Lord himself says, I am watching over
my word to perform it. Did you know it? Isn't that great? I'm watching over my word to
perform it. Don't you think that God knows what he said in his
word? Don't you know that he knows
the promises that he's made? Don't you think that he knows
that he has said that his son is coming again? Don't you think
he knows that? What are the chances that the
God of the universe, who spoke the worlds into existence, isn't
going to make sure that everything that he said happens? Whether I see it or don't. Whether
I feel it or don't, even whether I believe it or don't, God today,
today is watching over His Word to perform it. Jesus Christ is
coming again, church. You can take that to the bank.
And if you are one of His sons and daughters, because you have
turned from your sin, you've given by faith yourself to Christ,
embraced Him for your forgiveness, good news! Be encouraged! This is your future. This is
your future. This is your hope. All right,
so be encouraged church because this world is not.